Books for Foodies: The Chefs

By Eliot, on December 21st, 2017

As I continue perusing through my bulging bookshelves for Christmas gift suggestions, I can’t leave out the chefs. Although the fad may have come and gone, there are still some very good chef memoirs out there. These are some of my favorites.

This may have been the book that started it all—the bad-boy chef persona and the tell-all-behind-the-kitchen-door exposé. This book started my love affair (which I have spoken of often) with Bourdain. It’s a good thing I wasn’t in NYC in the 80s and 90s because I would have been a groupie.

Love his photo (on the left) on the original cover.

Since I will forever love Bourdain, I have to further recommend his other works here:

I have not picked up and read any of his fiction (Bone in the Throat and Gone Bamboo) and I haven’t read A Cook’s Tour (from his first television series). But, since they are written by the master, I would have to recommend them as well.

I read this primarily because Bourdain loved it (at least in the introduction to this book). I loved reading about a young female chef, seeing NYC in the late 80s, and I enjoyed her writing style. In fact, I need to find this book in the black hole of my library and revisit it.

Her unconventional upbringing may have led to a troubled youth, but Hamilton found her muse in food (and writing, I might add).

She followed up this book with Prune, a cookbook from her restaurant by the same name. After a quick perusal online, the recipes look quite innovative yet simple and practical.

Instead of yielding “servings,” these recipes are recorded as “per order.” Hamlton’s wit also comes through in a Bourdainian kind of way: “If the Health Department comes, take the serrano of the carving stand and throw in the oven.” She cautions to not make things look too “restauranty” yet the accompanying photos are quite stunning.

I did grow up watching Julia on PBS so I was a fan before all the Julie & Julia hubbub. That being said, it was the Meryl Streep/Amy Adams film that caused me to first pick up My Life in France. It’s a great companion piece to the film.

Her voice is honest as she struggles through “finding herself.” Her uniqueness and eccentricities come through as does the love that she and her husband, Paul, found in each other.

If this is not on your favorite foodie’s book shelf, you will be thanked many times over for gifting My Life In Franc this holiday season.

Why not go ahead and do a Julia-bundle and package up this book with a complete set of Mastering the Art of French Cooking or any of her subsequent cookbooks. (I know I would love that…hint, hint.)

So not written by a chef, this work by Questlove is about chefs. It’s is beyond beautiful; the photography by Kyoko Hamada is beyond creative. The narrative of the book, in a question/answer type interview format, is beyond insightful. Questlove along with Ben Greenman shows the creative process and lives of ten chefs (Nathan Myhrvold, Daniel Humm, Michael Solomonov, Ludo Lefebvre, Dave Beran, Jess Grifiths, Donald Link, Dominique Crenn, Daniel Patterson and Ryan Roadhouse).

With an introduction by Anthony Bourdain, this book is definitely “somethingtofoodabout.”

LudoBird; La Tour Eiffel by Kyoko Hamada

Food is “ideas married to the senses.” Questlove explains that food combines words, memory, music…a moment in time. This epiphany comes after meeting Jiro Ono and eating at Sukiyabashi Jiro. That singular meal becomes the catalyst for this book and for his exploration into the creative energy of these ten chefs.

Foraging in the back yard by Kyoko Hamada

Be assured that this is not another famous person seeking self-proclaimed foodie status. It is by an individual who wants to share and connect—“sharing in the experience with people is what food, culture, music and art is all about.” Questlove approaches his subjects with reverence and a genuine desire to learn something. His interviews with these famous rock star chefs are not without a bit of humor, sometimes self-deprecating. Many times, however, his questions are even more insightful than the answers that are given.